International journal of clinical practice
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Despite its high prevalence, chronic pain is suboptimally treated in approximately one half of affected patients. Failure to recognise and manage comorbid physical and psychosocial impairments may contribute to the perpetuation of chronic pain. Knowledge of the potential advantages and disadvantages of available analgesic medications will permit informed selection of the appropriate medication for the individual chronic pain patient. ⋯ Theoretically, these agents will provide sustained analgesia by minimising the end-of-dose pain that is often seen with short-acting medications, with improved patient convenience and a potential for reduced risk of adverse events. The extended-release formulation of tramadol (tramadol ER) has proven efficacy in chronic pain conditions such as osteoarthritis and low back pain, as well as a favourable tolerability profile. In addition, tramadol ER has been shown in clinical trials to improve pain-related sleep disturbances and physical function in patients with chronic pain from osteoarthritis and low back pain.
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Int. J. Clin. Pract. · Oct 2009
ReviewDiagnosis and management of hyponatraemia in hospitalised patients.
Hyponatraemia is a commonly encountered electrolyte abnormality in hospitalised patients and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The fact that most cases of hyponatraemia are the result of water imbalance rather than sodium imbalance underscores the role of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) in the pathophysiology. Hyponatraemia can be classified according to the measured plasma osmolality as isotonic, hypertonic or hypotonic. ⋯ Symptomatic acute hyponatraemia (< 48 h) is a medical emergency requiring rapid correction to prevent the worsening of brain oedema. In asymptomatic patients with chronic hyponatraemia (> 48 h or unknown duration), fluid restriction and close monitoring alone are sufficient, while a slow correction by 0.5 mEq/l/h may be attempted in symptomatic patients. Excessive rapid correction should be avoided in both acute and chronic hyponatraemia, because it can lead to irreversible neurological complications including central osmotic demyelination.
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Int. J. Clin. Pract. · Oct 2009
ReviewClinical utility of anion gap in deciphering acid-base disorders.
The anion gap (AG) measurement is a very useful tool in the evaluation of patients with acid-base disorders. Once metabolic acidosis is identified, AG will provide the important first step in the differential diagnosis of disorders that either increase the AG and those that leave the AG unchanged. Delta gap is the comparison between change (delta) in the AG and the change (delta) in bicarbonate (HCO(3)(-)). ⋯ Urine AG (unmeasured anions-unmeasured cations) is an indirect estimate of the urine NH(4)(+) excretion. It is typically negative in patients with normal AG metabolic acidosis secondary to diarrhoea. Utilisation of AG calculations helps clinicians in identifying and treating acid-base disorders.